Something ending in "K," perhaps / FRI 5-3-24 / Nickname for a Texas metropolis / Alternative to the online newspaper, colloquially / Phrase that inspired the title of Prince Harry's memoir / Athlete's affliction, informally / Game with a hands-down winner? / Pip's love in "Great Expectations" / Adornment for the unpierced

Friday, May 3, 2024

Constructor: Eli Cotham

Relative difficulty: Very Easy


THEME: none 

Word of the Day: SPARE (20A: Phrase that inspired the title of Prince Harry's memoir) —

Spare is a memoir by Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex, which was released on 10 January 2023. It was ghostwritten by J. R. Moehringer and published by Penguin Random House. It is 416 pages long and available in digital, paperback, and hardcover formats and has been translated into fifteen languages. There is also a 15-hour audiobook edition, which Harry narrates himself.

The book was highly anticipated and was accompanied by several major broadcast interviews. The title refers to the aristocratic adage that an "heir and a spare" was needed to ensure that an inheritance remained in the family. In the book, Harry details his childhood and the profound effect of the death of his mother, Diana, Princess of Wales, as well as his teenage years, and subsequent deployment to Afghanistan with the British Army. He writes about his relationship with his older brother, Prince William, and his father, King Charles III, and his father's marriage to Queen Camilla, as well as his courtship and marriage to the American actress Meghan Markle and the couple's subsequent stepping back from their royal roles.

Spare received generally mixed reviews from critics, some who praised Harry's openness but were critical of the inclusion of too many personal details. According to Guinness World RecordsSpare became "the fastest selling non-fiction book of all time" on the date of its release. (wikipedia) (my emph.)

• • •

So weird to have Fridays play like Saturdays for seemingly months now, and then encounter this Friday puzzle, which I blew through like it was barely there. Tuesday/Wednesday-level, tops. Difficulty-wise, this was wispy, but despite a barrage of subpar short fill, the longer answers overwhelmingly paid off, which is what's supposed to happen with a late-week themeless (particularly a Friday), so I'm pretty pleased with today's solving experience, overall. Typically, a puzzle (particularly a Friday/Saturday) will start slow or slowing, and then (ideally), there's a breakthrough followed by a whoosh that sends me careening happily around the grid. Today, the puzzle didn't even bother to start slow, and the whoosh came before I'd had a chance to even get settled, right out of the box. I wanted NORM for 1A: Average but instantly thought "maybe MEAN?" and kept that answer in my head as well as I tested the crosses. Since the first cross I checked, 4D: Juncture, wanted to be NODE, I decided to go MEAN->NODE, and then the "O" from NODE gave me ALSO and I decided that that was enough confirmation for me to write all those answers in. I've been doing crosswords long enough that ASAHI and ELENA Delle Donne are gimmes, so I was quickly ready to test my first long Across, and ... whoosh:


I should say that before I even looked at the clue for 20-Across, I had this odd moment of thinking "well, I assume the answer has something to do with ANHEUSER-BUSCH because what the hell else starts 'ANHE-'!?" So there was an extra zing to that first whoosh today—the "aha" of the odd letter-sequence revelation on top of the inherent greatness of the answer itself. If I'm stopping to take a screenshot, that either means it's very bad or very good, and here, it was very much the latter. I didn't even have time to be brought down by the rather lackluster NW before I went hurtling across the grid, and luckily the pleasing momentum provided by AN HEIR AND A SPARE largely continued, with sufficient power from smile-inducing answers to blow right through "ADIA" and NENE and ÉTÉS and the like without too much wincing.


DEAD-TREE EDITION didn't do much for me (feels like I've seen it before, so whatever freshness the term had has worn off), but I will admit that PET PSYCHIC, besides being the most absurd profession ("profession"?) on the planet, really got me, in a good way. Again, as with "ANHE-," I had this weird parsing problem where I was staring down "PETPS-" The "PETP-" part of it had me wondering if maybe there wasn't such a thing as PET PAINTING or PET PAINTS or PET PASTELS—that was how I first took "medium" in [Medium for animals]. But the "PS-" was unimpeachable and it didn't take me long to answer the question "What could possibly follow PET and start with PS-?" PET PSYCHIC. So dumb, I love it! I also have a soft spot for the term VALISES, which I did not realize until filling the answer in. "Hey, that's a nice word," I thought. And crossed with VAMOOSE! Imagining people VAMOOSE-ing with their VALISES down the AVENUES, I entered the bottom of the grid, which is the one and only area where my forward momentum stalled for a bit; I went right through the middle of those long answers, but couldn't get either of them from just their middle chunks. So I went back up to that RECOATS area and down via "NOW LET'S SEE..." (also nice), and from there quickly filled out the front ends of the long answers down below, and bang bang, big payoff there with "THIS IS AN OUTRAGE!" and (especially!) GAS STATION SUSHI (49A: Shell fish? What a clue!). I only wish that ASAMI and ASAHI had swapped places. because after that GAS STATION SUSHI you are definitely want something to wash it down, and ASAHI seems fitting. The SUSHI / ASAHI crossing would've been the cherry on top (which, coincidentally, is how they serve GAS STATION SUSHI. Me: [looks dubiously at plastic container of sushi next to the beef jerky jar] "Maraschino cherry?" Cashier: "Yup. It's sweet. Kinda hides the fishy taste, you know? You want a Miller Lite with that?" "Uh ... you got any ASAHI?"). 


Two trouble spots today. After I hit the bottom of the grid from the east, I tried to climb back up the west via the back end of 38D: One way to prepare steak, but with an -RE there, the only thing I could think was something-RARE, but MEDIUM didn't fit and I didn't know there were other RAREs besides maybe ... VERY? WAY? "How would you like your steak?" "Like ... rare." "How rare? "WAY RARE, man." Much as WAY RARE amused me, I (wisely) didn't write it in. This is the point at which I fled back to the RECOATS area and back down again. That area wasn't tough, but it did have one briefly toughish clue: 29D: Something ending in "K," perhaps (RACE). My fake-cultured self was like "Isn't that how they number the works in Mozart's catalogue—with numbers followed by K?" Yes, but irrelevant here, where we're dealing with (foot) RACEs of 5K and 10K and possibly other dimensions.


Notes:
  • 25A: Athlete's affliction, informally (THE YIPS) — you know I hate it when they use the same clue for two different answers, but today was the day I wouldn't have minded, because [Golf difficulties, perhaps] is very close to perfect for THE YIPS (while being just OK for its actual answer, 60A: LIES). I know that anyone athlete can get some version of THE YIPS, but I associate it most closely with golf.
  • 35A: Shared a bed with one's baby (COSLEPT) — loved seeing this rather common concept in the puzzle, though I would've liked COSLEEP or COSLEEPING a hair's breadth better.
  • 9D: Game with a hands-down winner? (TWISTER) — not many "?" clues today, but the ones that they trot out really land. 
  • 42A: Pip's love in "Great Expectations" (ESTELLA) — darn this girl and her ambiguous final vowel! Luckily there's no such thing as "steak TERTARE" (sounds like something you'd find next to the GAS STATION SUSHI) (eater beware)
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

102 comments:

Conrad 5:50 AM  


Very Easy for a Friday. My only overwrite was ESTELLe before ESTELLA at 42A. I need to read more Dickens.

dash riprock 5:52 AM  
This comment has been removed by the author.
andrew 6:01 AM  

Easy is right (for a Friday). Biggest problem - I assumed it was Shania TwAIN (not TPAIN, though the title didn’t sound like her) - wETPSYCHIC sounded reasonable for ducks and geese, water being a medium, I self-justified.

Don’t like the OHGEEs and AHOKs of the world (UM, ER, EM, OK could also be the starting letters) but otherwise, this was easy breezy (and now off to play IMSQUEEZY)…

CyC 6:18 AM  

Fun. Had "THISISATRAVESTY" before outrage.

Wanderlust 6:36 AM  

Like Rex, I was racing through this one until suddenly, right in the homestretch, I got THE YIPS and froze. Actually, I didn’t get THE YIPS. For some reason, I thought it was THE YeatS. (Are yeats some other thing? I googled it and of course all i got was the dead poet, then I dropped the S and got a rapper.) i couldn’t see right away what an EAR C—- could be. (All I could think of was ear gauge, a term that I learned here earlier in the week.) i had no idea about the filter acronym, and “main, e.g.” could have been a million things. And then, right as the crowd thought the champ was going to go down in flames, I pushed through THE YIPS and realized it was YIPS, not YeatS. And the gold medal was mine.

Very good puzzle. So many great long answers and clever clues. HEPA was the only thing I didn’t know. My middling French came in handy with AVEC, ETES, ILES. Two things that I am not sure really exist — PET PSYCHICS and GAS STATION SUSHI — made me laugh. Can you really buy sushi in gas stations? I picture some Japanese chef stopping to fill up his tank, seeing the display of sushi in the store and screaming, “THIS IS AN OUTRAGE!”

Burghman 6:44 AM  

Struggled a lot. Too much French (I think?) - ETES, AVEC, ILES, “saisons chaudes”. I know very little outside of fleeting Spanish from my long ago high school days, so when I see things that are obviously foreign words they get a half second glance from me and don’t provide any help to my solve. All 4 of those are SE-ish and caused me problems. I’m not anti-French or anti-foreign words, it’s just the concentration in that area and my absolute lack of almost anything French in my memory banks.

Anthony In TX 6:49 AM  

I was honestly shocked that ADIA was Sarah McLachlan's highest-charting single. I would have guessed "Angel" (you know, the saddest song ever that they play on those ads with all the homeless, beaten, hungry animals), or even "Possession," her big US breakout. Anyway, super easy Friday; finished it in 10:56; hopefully Saturday is a fun challenge.

Anonymous 6:50 AM  

Yes, extremely easy. I had TOORARE before TARTARE. Then ESTELLA came to the rescue.

Anonymous 7:04 AM  

Hard puzzle for me. Solved it but I struggled to get a toe hold. For some reason I was just not hitting on all cylinders.

Fun_CFO 7:05 AM  

Not close to PB, but well below my avg Friday time. I think, my biggest slow-down was a bad case of “no way, that’s too straightforwardly easy for a Friday” syndrome.

Long entries in this puzzle are great. So great that probably could have lived with just about any amount of rough/bad surrounding fill and still liked it. Thankfully there wasn’t a ton. So, big thumbs up for me overall.

Hate double clues as well, but I agree with Rex that cluing THEYIPS and LIES the same would have worked here. Better, perhaps.

Had the CHI at end of PETPSYCHIC, and really wanted something related to the implanted CHIps in pets.

Congrats on the debut Mr. Eli and nod to your wife on the great “Shell fish?” clue.

Adam 7:13 AM  

TIEd before TIER and ESTELLe before ESTELLA would have given me TedTARE. Do they serve steak at a Ted Talk? But then I figured it out. Agree with @Rex, much easier than usual for Friday. I enjoyed it.

kitshef 7:22 AM  

Yes, very easy. Easier than an average Wednesday. At least, it was for a frequent solver. But I wonder how much of that was due to the crosswordese that could present difficulties for a newer solver (e.g. ACLU, MAI, AOL, ETES, GTOS, ASAHI, NENE, IGOR, ADIA, ILES, SPAS, ASAMI, INIT)

DrBB 7:23 AM  

Easy-ish for me except for the NE. ADIA, TPAIN, SPARE, THEYIPS -- all that stuff was out of my wheelhouse.

NENE should have been a gimme but I resisted because aren't they super-endangered? I know they survive in Hawaii but I didn't think they were a "frequent" sighting.

Probably futile to point this out, but MEAN is not not not a synonym for "average." It's a common confusion that I wish x-words would stop reinforcing.

puzzlehoarder 7:24 AM  

This seemed to set a new record for easiness even though the actual time was no record. The current difficulty level really has been higher of late. Despite the lack of resistance the solve still had plenty of entertainment thanks especially to the two grid spanning debuts.

She'll have an ASHI ASAMI.

yd -0 QB19. @okanaganer, congrats on the new record and finding that cheese, it was kind of new for me too

PH 7:25 AM  

Got hung up on PETPSYCHIC, but breezed through the rest. Knew ELENA Delle Donne (thanks Erik Agard!), ADIA, DACHA from previous xwords. Learned HEPA stands for high efficiency particulate air.

GAS STATION SUSHI? THIS IS AN OUTRAGE! Fantastico....

Great debut from Eli Cotham, hope to see him again!

SouthsideJohnny 7:28 AM  

Omg, do they really sell sushi at gas stations ? It’s hard to think of a less appetizing concept than that. Hopefully there’s an actual sushi bar inside a large rest area on the highway or something like that and OFL was only joking about it being in the jerky aisle.

TPAIN was never going to happen for me, and from the comments so far, it appears that only about 1 out of a hundred of us will not have heard of ADIA - and yes, of course I am in that tiny cohort.

I reluctantly dropped in COSLEPT which seems like a word that is legit, but somehow shouldn’t be (it just sounds weird to my ear).

I thought the clue for TWISTER was probably the cream of the crop today (and agree with Rex that they missed an opportunity with the clue for THE YIPS).

Son Volt 7:36 AM  

I mean who wouldn’t like multiple French entries, inane royalty stuff and not only AH OK but the equally mindless OH GEE? COSLEPT is creepy.

Dan Bern

Opened the puzzle and thought the grid layout was handsome - the pleasantness ended there.

I may be wrong

Lewis 7:40 AM  

Well, my Libra yen for balance liked the big plus sign in the middle, corner-flanked by two minus signs.

My predilection for pop in a puzzle loved the six terrific NYT answer debuts: CO-SLEPT, NOW LET’S SEE, PET PSYCHIC, THE YIPS, and the spanners AN HEIR AND A SPARE and GAS STATION SUSHI.

Marvelous cross of PET PSYCHIC and THE YIPS – as I imagine former grokking the latter.

Adding to the pop are the other two terrific spanners, each of which have appeared in the Times puzzle but once before: DEAD TREE EDITION and THIS IS AN OURAGE.

Spanner heaven.

Then throw in four scintillating clues – [Shell fish?], [Game with a hands-down winner?], [Play things], and [Service agreement] – and wow, what a fun tour through the box today!

Plus, a five-letter palindrome (MADAM), memories of past Twister tangles, the lovely VALISES, and the sweetest of all – memories evoked by COSLEPT (the sounds, warmth, and marvelous perfume of a sleeping baby).

And all this in a NYT puzzle debut? Can this be the start of a run, Eli? Can it please? This was out of the park for me. Congratulations, and thank you so much!

Shirley F 7:48 AM  

Is WEDGE issue a thing?

Anonymous 7:51 AM  

I love that Two Nice Girls’ “Birth Control and Beer” made it into this write-up (linked, I guess, as things you’d buy at a gas station with your sushi and asahi)?

Anonymous 8:01 AM  

“COSLEPT is creepy” is an extremely creepy thing to say

rushscott 8:04 AM  

On the rare occasion that I truly finish a Friday without help I know that Rex will start of with some sort of "absurdly easy" type comment, and I was NOT disappointed! But given this is only the second one this week I didn't need help on, that should come as no surprise. I did really like this puzzle a lot. Hoping that someday I'll solve one that gave Rex a semblance of resistance...

Anonymous 8:08 AM  

Agree with the easy part, but beg to differ with OFL on "subpar fill". Although not difficult, the fill was dreck-less and upbeat.

@dash- you're new to me. Are you a professional poet?

HunterS 8:23 AM  

COSLEPT=NOSLEEP

Camilita 8:36 AM  

I have a soft spot for the word VALISE too. My grandparents called their suitcases valises. As kids, this cracked us up then. Maybe because they were Italian and it's more like Valigia. Anyway no one says Valise anymore and back in the 60s and 70s not too many people did either!

egsforbreakfast 8:52 AM  

What are you drinking?
ASAHI
ASAMI

Where can I find a loose woman?
Sorry, TARTARE rare hereabouts.

Speaking of TARTARE, @Rex says that he briefly considered wAyrARE, which is exactly what TARTARE is.

Mrs. Egs periodically consults a pet psychic. Oddly, the psychic often runs into Mrs. Egs' deceased brother while exploring the 5th dimension.

LIES aren't golf difficulties for former President Von ShitzInPantz. He did, after all, recently win two club championships at a club he owns.

Impressive debut! Thanks and congrats, Eli Cotham.

Diane Joan 8:53 AM  

I got hung up on the lower right. I kept picturing the seashell on the Shell station sign and put “signs” in there. I continued to make a mess in that area until I reached for a lifesaver on the app. Otherwise it was a good puzzle in my estimation.

M. Cohen 8:56 AM  

I don't get LIES (60A). How is this a difficulty? It's common knowledge that for a certain former President (who is now absurdly being touted as an "outlaw hero.") lying on the golf course is not only not difficult; it is second nature.

RooMonster 9:01 AM  

Hey All !
Rex in rare form today! Happy for end of semester, maybe? 😁

Got my new modem yesterday, so back to computer solving, although my computer was fighting me this morning. Froze, so unplugged, and tried again. Silly technology.

Found puz like Rex, difficult at first, but started getting answers, and ended up finding it easy, finishing in 24 minutes, which is lightening fast for me (considering a couple weeks ago was over an hour!)

Thinking COSLEPT is a made-up word. Like seeing VAMOOSE. What are s a WEDGE issue?

Made it to another Friday, no w only if the weekend lasted longer...

No F's (THIS IS AN OUTRAGE!) Har
RooMonster
DarrinV

Anonymous 9:02 AM  

The Mozart numbering starts with K, fwiw. For example the famous easy piano sonata is K. 545, and the numbers go all the way up to the Requiem, K. 626. Mozart was a busy guy in his short time on this plane.

Bob Mills 9:22 AM  

Had to cheat to finish this one, even though most of it was fairly easy. PETPSYCHIC was hard to get, because I didn't know TPAIN. I also had never heard of Sarah McLachlan. The Prince Harry quote makes sense, but I couldn't pick up the vowel sound of the "H" in HEIR and thought it had something to do with Princess Anne.

I agree that COSLEPT is not a real word.

Gary Jugert 9:23 AM  

It's fine. PET PSYCHIC, VAMOOSE, and GAS STATION SUSHI made me smile.

As I know you were losing sleep over this, the NYT games customer service fixed my broken puzzle yesterday in a kind and expedient manner. It's my second interaction with them and they are wonderful.

The last person to call a suitcase a valise died in a plane crash in 1947.

Symmetrical ASAHI/ASAMI. TPAIN crossing ADIA was rude.

Propers: 8
Places: 1
Products: 4
Partials: 4
Foreignisms: 5
--
Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 22 (32%)

Uniclues:

1 Embarrassing time a Viagra purveyor hopes to help you avoid.
2 Superior skeleton snob.
3 Plan for a reluctant father.

1 THE YIPS NITE
2 TIBIA ELITIST
3 DUE DATE VAMOOSE

My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Annual convention for Tic-Tac-Toe aficionados. X'S AND O'S FAN CON.

¯\_(ツ)_/¯

mathgent 9:26 AM  

Excellent that the grid had only four threes, but then it had AHOK, OHGEE, ASAMI (true junk!) as well as COSLEPT and HEPA (borderline junk).

Behind and at the end of the deli counter at my neighborhood market is a woman making up trays and trays of sushi every day. And yet, when I'm checking out, I never see any on the conveyer belt. Do gas stations come in and buy it up?

Matthew 9:46 AM  

Anyone else want VALIUMS for "some carry-ons" initially? ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

Gary Jugert 9:52 AM  

@DrBB 7:23 AM
Probably futile to point this out when math is involved, but clues are clues, not synonyms, so sayeth Joachim's dictum.

Nancy 9:57 AM  

GAS STATION SUSHI is a Thing? Who on earth would order it? When it comes to raw fish, you can't be too careful, that's what I say.

Or maybe it's a modern idiom standing for something entirely different? Must read the blog and find out.

There are PET PSYCHICS now? What do they do, exactly? Read your pet's paw? Warn you ahead of time that your dog is about to chew up your entire closet of shoes? I assume they don't come cheap -- that they're more expensive than, say, dog walkers, dog groomers, or vets.

As for the long stacked answers -- no one can say they're not colorful. DEAD TREE EDITION and AN HEIR AND A SPARE are great. THIS IS AN OUTRAGE is a memorable expression and one I've used often. On the other hand, AHOK and OHGEE are neither great nor memorable.

And even though all the pop culture WEDGEd into the NE corner annoyed me (as you might imagine) no end, the colorful grid-spanners made this a pretty nice Friday, all things considered.

EasyEd 10:00 AM  

Sometimes in doing puzzles that have long answers I make up possible answers that are outlandish. This time the author outlandished me.

Whatsername 10:16 AM  

Strapped for time this morning but just wanted to say: (1) "Nice Debut, Eli" and (2) I thought Spare was a worthwhile read, the story-telling considerably enhanced by a Pulitzer Prize winning ghostwriter.

Anonymous 10:42 AM  

I think 15A, ACLU, is a violation of the crossword rule of not having a word in the clue that also appears in the answer, at least as an initial. I first thought ACLU, then dismissed it because the L stands for liberty, and the word liberty is in the clue. But what do you know, ACLU it is.

Carola 10:49 AM  

Easy and enjoyable - starting with the grid design that gave us a true cross word, and lots more wit between the DEAD TREE VERSION of AN HEIR AND A SPARE and the OUTRAGE of GAS STATION SUSHI. My one hang-up was the PET PSYCHIC: I'd guessed the singer was TwAIN, so the "medium" was "wET" something, and all I could think of was videos of artist elephants painting at an easel....maybe using a wET sponge? ...until crosses got me PSYCHIC. Add me to the VALISE fans. - shades of elegant travel in the days before rollaboards.

Do-over: TwAIN before TPAIN, Cuff before CLIP. Help from previous puzzles: ADIA, URAL. No idea: ELENA, TPAIN, BARRETT.

@Lewis, thank you for the image of a PET PSYCHIC with a dog that has THE YIPS!

Paula 10:51 AM  

Very quick, very fun. I generally like my Friday puzzles to take longer to solve (this one took less than 10 and half minutes for me), but it was a delightful jaunt!

GILL I. 10:52 AM  

Well, I'm not up on the doings of the Royal family and who wrote what for whatever. I also didn't know ASAHI. So.....I stared at ANNE I RAN DA SPARE. You did? I thought. OH GEE a mistake that took me forever to fix. Thanks a lot for TWISTER....I didn't understand WEDGE issue, I've never played TWISTER...But guess what? I managed to fix that corner all by myself.

Well...I did cheat on TPAIN. Should I remember him and why he'd ever sing sumpin like "Buy U A Drank"????

Now on to GAS STATION SUSHI. Here in California where gas is about $5.80 a gallon and where the gas owners like to gouge the poor folks and our Governor makes up excuses because he doesn't really like gas although he has a lot of it, It's doubtful anyone would want to buy SUSHI after they just plunked $100 for gas like I just did. Besides, I've never seen it at a GAS station and if I did, I'd buy the Cheetos instead.

THIS IS AN OUTRAGE...Yep. Tis. Does it give you THE YIPS? Tis so.

One cheat on a Friday...That's good for me. Yes, it was a little easy but I didn't care. I really enjoyed some of this. Except for: COSLEPT. It had a WEDGE Issue for me. I'm not sure I COSLEPT with any baby and I don't understand why one would. Other than that, I finished and I was happy.

Biggest laugh today? @egs Von ShitzinPantz. May I use that name?

Anonymous 10:53 AM  

Huh?????

Anonymous 10:59 AM  

@MCohen: In golf, a LIE (in this case) refers to where the ball is positioned on the course.

If you have a difficult lie (in a sand trap, in the "rough" [taller grass], or near water or trees, etc.) you have a hard shot to make.

Anonymous 11:01 AM  

I’ll never forget ESTELLA because Alanis Morissette’s Jagged Little Pill came out the year I read Great Expectations in English class, and it’s opening track has the lyric “I’m like ESTELLA / I like to reel it in and spit it out / I’m frustrated by your apathy”… which for some reason nearly thirty years later is still seared in my brain

Newboy 11:02 AM  

Well that was fun afterwards, but I wanted EARcuff for way too long so certainly not easy given the pop artist focus. I must be getting old since anyone past Springsteen and Buffet rank right up there with GAS-STATION SUSHI. yips before LIES, of course, before RECOATing THE YIPS in their new slot, so about as frustrating as thinking NENE were exclusive to Maui. In retrospect, I certainly agree more with @Lewis than Rex …. Not unusual. Still, to be fair, the software said that today’s final time was minutes faster than normal 😑

jberg 11:02 AM  

People here sometimes say DEAD TREE versION for the printed puzzle, so I almost put that in--but realized the possibility of EDITION while I was writing it, so I waited for the crosses on those 4 letters. It still felt whooshy, though. So did the whole puzzle, and with a lot of wonderful clues.

As a political scientist, let me explain WEDGE issues to the puzzled among you. They are issues one party emphasizes in order to split the other party's coalition, just as you split a log by driving a WEDGE into it. In the 1980s, the Republicans were using abortion as a wedge issue against the Democrats; today, after the Dobbs decision, Democrats are using it against the Republicans.

Our university cafeteria sells sushi rolls that have been made elsewhere and vacuum packed into little plastic boxes and then refrigerated. No nigiri or sashimi. I assume GAS STATION SUSHI is the same thing, sold inside a gas station. It gets its own name because that name is inherently funny.

@kitshef, nice puzzle yesterday. I got to it too late to comment then. I had some fun trying (unsuccessfully) to think of other possible themers.

pabloinnh 11:02 AM  

Easy, eh? Not around here. Didn't know the SPARE quote or ADIA, never heard of a PETPSYCHIC, which still sounds like someone's idea of a joke, don't have GASSTATIONSUSHI in these parts and shouldn't be allowed anywhere, and COSLEPT is not what happened when you shared a bed with a baby. That would be "woke up every ten minutes".

I also cringe when I hear VAMOOSE used to mean "beat it", even though I know that happens. It's a corruption of "vamos" or even "vamonos" which apply to something we're about to do, not an imperative to someone else. I'm sure this is a lost cause, like wanting tamal as the singular and not tamale, but if this is the worst problem I have today things will be pretty good.

Impressive debut for which congrats, EC. Didn't Exactly Charm my socks off, but thanks for a fair amount of thorny fun.

Anonymous 11:07 AM  

I’ve not been there but have to wonder how “frequent” Nene sightings are on Kauai. There are are reported to be only about 3600 spread over five of the Hawaiian Islands. Some conservation organizations consider them imperiled. Never heard of Tpain.

Anonymous 11:08 AM  

I'm never sure when reading the comments whether people are being deliberately obtuse to increase the humor factor or whether people have truly never encountered a particular word meaning in their lives. I tend to go with the first option, since everyone appears to be a genius level wordsmith. But just in case, for your edification I am providing this link https://www.liveabout.com/lie-in-golf-1560896
Fabulous puzzle. Looking forward to many more.

Anonymous 11:12 AM  

What's your beef with it? I know there are multiple types of mean, but Wikipedia says they are the same in common usage: "The arithmetic mean (or simply mean or average) ..."

D Burge 11:35 AM  

You know the thing I like best about clueless cosplaying intersectional studies majors with masks and batons and helmets colonializing campuses with garbage-strewn barricaded shanty towns while policing Jew checkpoints in a $9.95 reflective vest and mindlessly repeating genocidal Hamas slogans from a professor with a bullhorn until they decide it's time to smash the windows of the library and take that shit over too?

When they start screaming "SHAME SHAME" as soon as somebody tries to stop them

hater 11:40 AM  

Any other 20-something gen-Z puzzlers feeling gaslit by how easy everyone is saying this was...sorry I don't know who Syd BARRETT is!

Anyway seeing how many people struggled with T-PAIN made me feel better

BAAABY GIRL WHATS YOUR NAME?? LEMME TALK TO YOU LEMME BUY U A DRANK, IM T-PAIN YOU KNOW ME!!

Read my mind 11:55 AM  

I'm thinking of the word "oh." Or maybe the word "ah." Can you guess which one? Isn't this fun?

johnk 11:55 AM  

The cross of two unknown pop references put a WEDGE between me and the NE. I've heard of McClachlan, but I don't care to know her material -- not even so I can solve a crossword.

Anonymous 12:08 PM  

Better than the NYT puzzle today was Rex Parker featuring Two Nice Girls! Rex, you’re even more awesome than I already thought.

kitshef 12:11 PM  

Thank you, @jberg. Some that did not make the cut due to theme consistency, symmetry, length, or uncertainty about their true origins:
German chocolate cake (Texas)
Hawaiian pizza (Canada)
Spanish rice (Mexico)
Baked Alaska (New York)
Chicken Kiev (France)
London broil (USA)
French fries (Belgium)
English horn (Poland)
Spanish flu (USA)
Scotch tape (USA)
Hawaiian punch (California)
Moscow mule (New York)
French dip (Los Angeles)

mathgent 12:13 PM  

@Gary Jugert (9:52). It's called Joaquin's Dictum. Joaquin used to hang around here. He would periodically remind us, with eloquence, that they are clues ; they don't need to be definitions.

Sam 12:13 PM  

Not easy for me! These recent Fridays are taking me much longer to solve than I am used to. Totally unfamiliar with the phrases DEAD TREE EDITION and AN HEIR AND A SPARE, although I get their meaning and was, with some difficulty, able to parse them. Bottom half of the puzzle played much easier.

Ando 12:23 PM  

@M. Cohen: LIES on a golf course means where your ball is sitting; a difficult lie might be in tall grass or with an obstacle between you and the green.

jb129 12:24 PM  

I didn't like it as much as Rex did. Definitely no whoosh for me. Who's TPAIN? THE YIPS? ADIA? Is AH OK the best we can do for NOW I GET IT? AH???
Congrats on your debut, Eli :)

Anonymous 12:26 PM  

I usually post as OISK; my boyhood idol passed away recently at 97...DNF. TPAIN with ADIA. Never heard of either, but OK if they are to appear, they shouldn't cross each other. Otherwise, liked the puzzle..

Anonymous 12:27 PM  

TPAIN?? DNF!

egsforbreakfast 12:30 PM  

@Gill I 10:52 VonShitzInPantz was actually used by Michael Cohen in a tweet that has now been read aloud into the court record. So it is publicly available and doesn't require anyone's permission for re-use.

jae 12:40 PM  

Easy. Pretty whooshy solve. TwAIN before TPAIN and ohOK before AHOK were the only costly erasures. Did not know ESTELLA and ELENA.

Delightful and fun, liked it a bunch! The 15s were excellent! A fine debut!

Unknown 12:43 PM  

I did not care for COSLEPT, but I guess that's a thing now?
And the "ends with a K clue" had be flummoxed, even though I'm raving a 10K this weekend.

The long answers were wonderful, as was PETPSYCHIC.
NENE, that's a nono.

Overall a pretty easy Friday. Only two 3s, which was a plus.
I'm giving this 4 stars.

Anonymous 12:51 PM  

Btw Rex:
Pet painters ARE a thing. My cousin is a talented artist but ended up paying the bills painting portraits of rich peoples' dogs lol...

Fun_CFO 1:14 PM  

For those questioning DEADTREEEDITION, here’s a quote from @dgd, a commenter, just yesterday, on this very blog.

“In the dead tree edition, I missed the gray square T’s for a while- not enough contrast for my eyes- but otherwise the puzzle had no problems.”

Used x word solvers pretty frequently.

Teedmn 1:14 PM  

Add me to the wET PSYCHIC group. Obviously it had to be PET PSYCHIC but that meant TWISTER had to be wrong because what was T PAIN? AH OK, I remember hearing that name, so PET it was. Now I just had to figure out what kind of issue a WErGE was. For some reason, the title of Sarah McLachlan's song is always A?IA for me and today ArIA won first. I may even own that CD!

A couple other hiccups occurred around the grid but I'm in agreement with Rex on the difficulty of this puzzle. Easy Friday. My entry was MADAM crossing MAI and ASAHI made the HEIR AND A SPARE a quick throw-down.

Has anyone eaten GAS STATION SUSHI? It wouldn't be a thing around my town. I side-eye the grocery store sushi; I can't imagine the gas station version. Sounds like salmonella waiting to happen.

Eli Cotham, thanks for the entertaining Friday!

Sailor 1:24 PM  

@DrBB, I feel your pain, truly I do. Been there. But, alas, in common usage "average" does very often imply (if not denote) MEAN, as per Merriam-Webster: "a single value (such as a mean, mode, or median) that summarizes or represents the general significance of a set of unequal values."

MetroGnome 1:39 PM  

Not "easy" at all. NW: A name and a brand name side-by-side, crossed with a phrase ("An heir and a spare") I've never heard of, and which was impossible to parse; NE, two pop culture names (TPAIN, ADIA) I did not know, along with TWISTER, which I've heard of but have never played and know nothing about; no idea what "Saisons chaudes" means or what HEPA represents or stands for; clueless about the AOL merger that apparently didn't happen; never heard of GAS STATION SUSHI and, once again, couldn't parse it even with most of the letters filled in. And I thought "TARTARE" was a kind of sauce, not a "way to prepare a steak" (?)

okanaganer 2:12 PM  

I had not the slightest idea what the "Something ending in a K" clue meant until I read Rex's explanation.

@Fun_CFO, I do the puzzle on my right monitor, and have Rex on my left monitor, so last night when I typed in DEAD TREE EDITION, dgd's comment was there staring at me on the left. Coincidence!

[@puzzlehoarder, thanks. Spelling Bee streak ended at 23 because I missed an absurdly simple word on Wed which I won't even mention as it's too embarrassing.]

MJB 2:17 PM  

Somehow valises reminded me of another old-time word for suitcase. My mother told me the following quite a few times: When a reporter asked Harry Truman the first thing he would do after arriving home after leaving the White House, he responded: “Take the grips up to the attic.”

Anoa Bob 2:29 PM  

I always check out the grid before starting a solve. Today I was discouraged to see that there were 35 black squares in this one because of all the short stuff that entails. I liked the four grid spanners but all those 3s and 4s were about as enticing as GAS STATION SUSHI.

Re 1A MEAN: I taught Research Statistics when I was still in the chalk and talk trade and I would say that its clue "Average" is the absolute best single word definition of MEAN. MEAN is one of a trio of central tendency measures of a data set. The "mode" is the most frequent value or score in the set, the "median" is the point that divides the set in half and the MEAN is the arithmetic average obtained by adding all the scores and dividing that by the number of scores. If you don't believe me then check out what wiki has to say.

I tried all the beers when I was living in Japan in the 80s. Sapporo was my absolute favorite with Kirin coming in a distant second. ASAHI I didn't care for. One of my big disappointment when returning to the U.S. from three years in Asia (Japan, South Korea, Philippines) was that imported beer from over there did not taste nearly as good. That was the 80s, so maybe these days it's improved.

This grid got significant fill assistance from the plural of convenience (POC), especially the two for one POC, where a Down and an Across both get a letter count, grid filling boost by sharing a single S at their ends as happens when ICE AGE/RECOAT, SPA/VALISE, AVENUE/ETE and LIEN/LIE all all short of their slots. Those Ss are the equivalent of cheater squares; they just fill up valuable territory without adding anything of value or interest to the puzzle. The POC Committee gave this grid a POC Assisted rating.

Okay, time to VAMOOSE.

Victory Garden 2:43 PM  

What did you all think of the Mini today? I thought it was kind of auto...MATIC. But I liked the weirdness of it anyway.

Masked and Anonymous 2:44 PM  

Pretty smoooth-goin solvequest at our house, except maybe that TPAIN/PETPSYCHIC/EARCLIPS/HEPA area. Also, in related news, ASAHI/ANHEIRANDASPARE was a total no-know. Guessed everything right eventually, tho. [especially after googlin the TPAIN one].

staff weeject pick: Only 4 choices, and none of em overly noteworthy or weird. Will go with the partial MAI drink.

faves: GASSTATIONSUSHI [Gives m&e gas, just contemplatin it]. NOWLETSSEE. VAMOOSE. TWISTER clue. THISISANOUTRAGE.

CO-SLEPT? har

Thanx for the co-fun, Mr. Co-tham dude. And congratz on yer themeless-style debut.

Masked & Anonymo3Us


**gruntz**

Anonymous 3:15 PM  

A lot of parents co-sleep with their babies in their bed, as opposed to using a crib or cradle. Nothing creepy about it at all, man.

okanaganer 3:35 PM  
This comment has been removed by the author.
Nancy 4:22 PM  

@MetroGnome -- TARTAR (accent on the 1st syllable) is the sauce -- and it goes with fish, though not with GAS STATION SUSHI. TARTARE (accent on the 2nd syllable) is raw steak. (Don't knock it if you've never tried it: It can be one of life's great treats.

Now that I think of it, this really is a puzzle for people who like uncooked food. (Though I wouldn't get my steak TARTARE from a GAS STATION any more than I'd get my SUSHI there. I'm glad so many other people found the whole idea highly...peculiar.

Especially funny Uniclues today, Gary, esp. #1.

Speaking of funny people, does anyone know where @Joe Dipinto is?

CDilly52 4:36 PM  

Of today’s solve, my daughter in her teens (and her besties) would have exercised their penchant for “naming” things and said something like, “Here comes Whooshie MacWhoosherton!” The solve sped past in a very early week fashion, yet had lots of interest from the long answers and provided a very nice memory.

I haven’t thought of ASAHI beer in decades, but my 21st birthday introduced me to that and other more “exotic” beers long, long before craft beers were readily available anywhere other than a friend’s home “brewery” experiments. Typically, better bars had a few US offerings other than Budweiser or Pabst, but in Champaign-Urbana only Lum’s had a wide offering of foreign beer.

The love of my life (not yet my husband but we’d been together about a year and a half) had insisted that beer was good. I disagreed, but then I hadn’t tasted anything other than the watered down pitchers at Treno’s or the T-Bird (two places adjacent to the music school at the U of I). Dreadful beer, but cheap and there was also free popcorn at been during happy hour. You could also get a mug of chili and half a grilled cheese for $0.50!! But I digress.

For my birthday, a gaggle of our friends had a concert to play. Afterwards, we all packed into a couple cars (anybody else remember when almost nobody had a car on campus?) and went way out in Champagne to a place called Lum’s, a franchise known for “ok” roast beef sandwiches, but this branch also had “exotic” bottled beers like ASAHI, Red Stripe and Guinness on tap. I had such a wonderful time, learned that “good” beer is wonderful, good friends are even better, and my not-yet-husband was then and remained the best friend and kindest man I have ever known.

As for the ASAHI, I could taste the bamboo. Not my favorite, but to this day, I will still drink a Red Stripe - only from a bottle (very cute stubby shape and a bit hard to find in glass), and a properly poured Guinness tastes divine. Since I still look for bottled Red Stripe in good beer stores, it must have been the quality of the beer that night, not that I was head over heels in love, right?

CDilly52 4:42 PM  

Here’s a little PS for @dash riprock, falling from yesterday. I have been there! Sometimes looking for my typos takes waaaaay too long. Meant to give you a shoutout yesterday.

Gary Jugert 4:47 PM  

@mathgent 12:13 PM
Thanks for the spelling correction. I knew I should've looked it up.

Georgia 5:11 PM  

So much easier when feeding often in the wee hours.

Visho 6:20 PM  

Always thought "Travesty" would be a great name for a car...as in Dodge Travesty. 😆

Dennis Doubleday 7:40 PM  

I first had RAVE for "something ending in K, perhaps", thinking they meant Ketamine, though that did seem out of character for NYT.

dgd 7:42 PM  

Andrew
I SEE that I am not the only one to put down Shania TWAIN. and I left her there for quite a while. Eventually straightened it out.
I had oHOK. and that delayed GAS
What the heck is GoS I was saying to myself. I was a little dense today. These ahs and ohs can be annoying. But maybe inevitable?

Anonymous 7:53 PM  

Shirley F
Wedge issue is most definitely a thing. It is used in politics for an issue that is used to turn a group of voters away from an opponent. The Republicans use crime and immigration as wedge issues.

Rich Glauber 7:55 PM  

Can't believe no one mentioned the brilliance of GASSTATIONSUSHI atop THISISANOUTRAGE. That's a sensational pair of grid spanners! Played on the easy side here, but without knowing the Heir and the spare line, the top took a bit more work than it might have. Fun solve, and that's what we hope for...

Anonymous 8:41 PM  

D Burge
Did you make a mistake about which blog you were on?
At least mention the puzzle once.

However horrible some of the protesters have acted, they are not running for president. We have an individual who could be president, most likely with fewer votes than his main opponent, who has every intention of imposing a dictatorship in this country. Now that is the real crisis this year. Everything else is secondary.

RooMonster 9:56 PM  

GAS STATION SUSHI is a running joke/gag in movies, and actually real life. Yes, it exists. No, you shouldn't eat it!

RooMonster Cook My Fish Giy

dash riprock 10:03 PM  
This comment has been removed by the author.
Anonymous 10:33 PM  

Sushi is not fish.
Sashimi is fish.

Sushi is a Japanese item on top of rice and often seaweed.

Randall 3:10 PM  

First time today that I laughed out loud. Like…rare. Way rare, man.

Anonymous 12:39 AM  

This was a slow Friday for me, mostly because of a few answers I'd never heard of.

I started like Rex, with MEAN, NODE, and the rest of the NW, then dropped in a 15. Only it was DEADTREEEDITION. I'd never heard of the monarchy expression, so it was one of the last answers to fall. Maybe I'm in the minority there, and that's why so many people found this easy? Fortunately it was inferrable, though it felt as though anything could go after ANHEIRAND.

The other bit of the puzzle that gave me trouble was the east, where HEPA was an uninferrable woe. I had to run the alphabet on the crossing PI_E with its very open-ended clue of "Main, e.g."

Anonymous 8:50 AM  

Figures you don’t have anything good to say about the current Presidency. You are a joke

Anonymous 8:54 AM  

Oh my god are you blind.

Diana, LIW 9:08 AM  

At first I thought the gimmick on yesterday's puz was DUMB. But then I thought it should have been DUMT

Lady Di

(written before starting Fri)

Waxy in Montreal 11:55 AM  

9A's clue seemed like a very odd title for Shania but I'm no musicologist so in went TWAIN which, in the final analysis (so to speak) led to a DNF due to wETPSYCHIC. Thought 3 of the 4 15-letter answers were far too easy for a Friday but, having never heard of GASSTATIONSUSHI, it took a long time to surface.

Otherwise, had EARRING before EARCLIP, METOO before ASAMI, and ISEE before AHOK. Is 'VALISES' still current? Always associate it with Agatha Christie novels and Cold War espionage but I guess it survived détente.

Les ÉTÉS AVEC MADAMes ELENA et ESTELLA dans un DACHA sur les ÎLES, mangeant bifsteak TARTARE et buvant le bière ASAHI? Hmmm...

spacecraft 2:16 PM  

What? VERY easy?? Do we have the same puzzle? Me: DNF for the entire east coast. I hardly know where to start.

What kind of name is TPAIN, except to torture us with yet another %@%!# letter add-on? WEDGE issue? Is that a thing? ADIA? Who knew? PET PSYCHIC? Oh come ON, now, really. Although, I suppose if people are dumb enough to go to a psychic in the first place, they'd probably take their dogs there too.

THE YIPS? Now, I'm not one to say that pro golfers aren't athletes, but when you say "athlete," I'm not likely to think of something that (as far as I ever heard) only applies to golfers. HEPA?? I can't even imagine what that might be an acronym for.

GAS STATION SUSHI? Please don't tell me there IS such a thing. As far as the east in this grid is concerned, THIS IS AN OUTRAGE!

Wordle bogey. Yeah, another one of not-my-days.

Anonymous 6:24 PM  

I don't equate valises with suitcases, although that is what they were used as originally. I think of them as something teachers and professionals carried that had their papers and/or books in them. But that's probably because when I was in highschool I was a member of the valise brigade, students who took honors classes, and carried several textbooks with them, so they didn't have to keep running back to their locker.

Daverino 10:14 PM  

Boy couldn’t have been on a more different wavelength than Rex today if I could. I DIDN’T care for this one too much…COSLEPT and DEAD TREE EDITION are sketch to me and never heard of the Harry phrase…shrug emoji. I wrote “uneven” in my side notes. Not an OUTRAGE but not much better than GAS STATION SUSHI. At least I solved it, so there’s that! We’re on to Saturday…

Anonymous 5:06 PM  

I've got a bone to pick with 18 down. There are 206 bones in the human body.
The two longest are the femur and the other femur. The two TIBIA bones are tied for third.

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